Following the recent demolition of the Young family home, The Music travelled back in time to gather nine other Australian ...
After a nearly decade-long hiatus from touring in North America, AC/DC will play 13 stadiums ... In 2024, the “Highway To Hell” rockers played venues all over Europe in support of the record.
Rubin was focusing on the arrangements—or, in AC/DC’s case, lack thereof. “Highway to Hell is probably the most natural-sounding rock record I’ve ever heard,” Rubin wrote in his essay.
AC/DC was formed in Sydney in 1973 by Angus and Malcolm Young, and they are best known for hits including Thunderstruck, Highway To Hell and Hells Bells. Their older brother George, who died in ...
A lot of AC/DC fans have been getting excited that the name Robert John ‘Mutt’ Lange – producer of the Highway To Hell, Back In Black and For Those About To Rock albums – seems to be in ...
Ballbreaker fails to conjure a truly iconic song akin to a Thunderstruck or Highway To Hell, but it deserves more credit than it is typically afforded. AC/DC’s debut – one of two initial Australia ...
AC/DC never had a certain political agenda, and that's because Angus Young felt no one needed to go beyond what this ...
Legendary rock icons AC/DC are tipped to return to Australian shores in late ... delivering a career-spanning setlist packed with iconic anthems like ‘Back in Black’, ‘Highway to Hell’, and ...
Malcolm and Angus would go on to found AC/DC in 1973 while older brother George co-founded rock band the Easybeats in 1964. Both Malcolm and George died in 2017, with Angus still touring with the ...
While a statue of Rory Gallagher outside Belfast’s Ulster Hall is fully merited, my most vivid memory of the legendary venue is an electric gig by AC/DC in 1979 ...
AC/DC's Phillip Rudd, Angus Young, Mark Evans, Malcolm Young, and Bon Scott photographed in 1977. The demolition of Angus and Malcolm's childhood home in Sydney has led to outrage by fans.